Sunday, October 21, 2012

Headline and news outline by credit master and expert witness: John Ulzheimer.

2012 continues to be a busy year for FCRA lawsuits, FCRA lawyers and
FCRA expert witnesses says Ulzheimer.

According to WebRecon, a Michigan based Litigant
Data tracking bureau, FCRA lawsuits are up 15% year to date in 2012
over the same time period (January through September) in 2011.

And while
the pace of lawsuits has slowed considerably (at one time they were up
over 90% year to date compared to 2011) 2012 is still shaping up to meet
or exceed 2011′s record numbers.

Often these types of lawsuits involved a consumer plaintiff suing a
credit industry player such as a bank, credit reporting agency (or some
other form of consumer reporting agency), or a collection agency. The
allegations can rage from reasonable procedures to permissible purpose
violations (improper access) to re-investigation issues.

A big part of how ethical credit repair works, is demanding that our clients rights under federal laws are not violated. Collection agencies have no problem threatening to sue our clients for the money that they are trying to collect, so basically we demand for our clients that the collection agencies:

1. irrefutably prove that the debt they are trying to collect belongs to the client.

2. that they have proof of ownership or the proper legal assignment of the right to collect the debt.

If the collection agencies just send a duplicate statement of what they had sent previously, or a "screen shot" from their computer showing that anyone can type information into their database, they did not comply with what the client requested by exercising their rights provided by the FDCPA. Refusal to comply gives the client the right to sue for damages.

If the credit bureaus and original creditors refuse to comply with the clients rights under the FCRA, it is the exact same result. If any entity violates our clients rights under federal law - they deserve to get litigated against.

At Credit Restoration Associates, we build the paper trail for our legal team for both FCRA and FDCPA violation lawsuits.

Our legal team is available when the "hammer" needs to be pulled out to demand enforcement of the clients rights. We even have access to an expert witness with over 100 cases under his belt with victories in: credit
report damage, credit score damage and credit reputation damages.

Call us today for an absolutely free credit consultation and credit report review and see if we might be able to help your situation: Toll Free: 800-648-5157.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

The credit score you receive may be much higher or lower than the one
a lender uses when deciding whether to give you a mortgage, credit card
or auto loan, a new government report finds.

One out of five consumers is likely to receive a score that is
"meaningfully" different from the score used by a lender to make a
credit decision, according to study from the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau that analyzed 200,000 credit files from the three
major credit bureaus, TransUnion, Equifax and Experian.

As a result, many of these consumers receive either better or
worse terms on mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and other credit
products.

"This study highlights the complexities consumers face in the
credit scoring market," said CFPB Director Richard Cordray in a
statement. "When consumers buy a credit score, they should be aware that
a lender may be using a very different score in making a credit
decision."

The credit score a lender sees often depends on the type of loan or credit product they are considering. Lenders that use FICO scores the most commonly used score, could be looking at one of 49 different scores to determine how risky you are -- including a FICO auto score, a FICO bankcard score and a FICO mortgage score.

YOU HAVE 49 FICO SCORES

While you receive only one type of FICO score, lenders can choose
from a variety of scores based on the kind of loan you're applying for.
So if you want an auto loan, the lender can look up your FICO auto
score. Apply for a credit card and there's a specific FICO bankcard
score lenders can use.

There's also a FICO mortgage score, an installment loan score and a
personal finance score that specifically focuses on your history of
using financing companies -- for example, if you've signed up for
store-branded credit cards. Then there's the generic FICO score, which
is the most widely used score and is calculated based on your history
with all forms of credit.

Even though newer versions of FICO's scoring software are being
used, many credit reporting agencies continue to make older versions of
the software available to lenders -- adding to the overall number of
FICO scores for each consumer.

"The lender is going to choose the [scoring] model they think is
most appropriate for what the consumer is applying for," said John Ulzheimer.
"FICO is trying to further differentiate the risk of doing business
with a consumer generically versus for a specific product. For example, I
care how you pay your auto loans for any decision, but I really care about how you paid your auto loan if you're applying for an auto loan."

These scores are for lenders' eyes only, said Ulzheimer. When you
request your FICO score, you receive the generic version. And the score
you get may be about 15 or 20 points higher or lower than the score the
lender is using to screen you, said Ulzheimer.

The discrepancy between the scores lenders and consumers receive
was the subject of a report issued last year by the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau that showed that scores may differ for a variety of
reasons, including the use of different scoring models by credit
reporting agencies and that lenders and consumers don't always get
scores from the same reporting agency.

To more closely compare the
scores lenders and consumers receive, the CFPB said it would obtain data
about credit scoring from FICO and from each of the three credit
bureaus.

Rod Griffin, director of public education at Experian, said
Experian provides different FICO scores to lenders depending on the kind
of risk they are trying to assess. And he said consumers don't need to
see every single score, because they are all based on the same
information contained in a credit report -- some scores just weigh
certain types of lending information differently.

So just because a
consumer is seeing a different score doesn't mean that a lender is
looking at different information.

"There's a tremendous focus on these numbers, but what's really
important is the credit report -- your credit report is what's used to
calculate all of those scores, and you control what's on your credit
report," said Griffin.

And though consumers are being kept in the dark about many of the
scores lenders are using to evaluate them, in most cases that 15- to
20-point difference in the score is not going to hold much sway when it
comes to being approved or denied for credit, said Ulzheimer.

"If someone is a high risk, they're going to be a high risk for
any product, and if you have a great [generic] score, you're going to
have a great score for any product," he said.

Aside from FICO scores, which are the most commonly-used scores,
there are a plethora of other credit scores out there -- like
proprietary scores developed by the credit bureaus and scores you can
get from private companies like Quizzle.com, CreditSesame.com or
CreditKarma.com.

"The grand total number of credit scores is truly countless -- so
while 49 FICO scores seems like a large number, it's really a drop in
the bucket," said Ulzheimer. "The good news is that proper credit
management transcends all credit risk scores. If you do the right
things, you'll have a good score across the board.